Complete rubbish a fuel tank worth of diesel to run a top C over a month lol,I use about £25 worth of diesel in a separate tank next to the heater every 4 weeks or so. You preheat as said on the way to the first job to get it up to temp and by doing this with the van running it uses no static battery power then,be careful on frosty mornings though mine was at 70degrees pre heated at the first job this morning dropping to around the 45-50 mark it was smoking off the glass no hiding your using hot water,hot water is the only way to WFP imo hot means cleaner Windows.
Thanks for your input with regard diesel usage over a month. User experience is worth much more than written down theory.
I just used Webasto's figures of 0.59 liters of diesel an hour on full throttle. Webasto give 0.30 lph under reduced throttle. (I excluded the reduce heat consumption.
I worked on the assumption of 6 hours a day 5 days a week and 4 weeks a month = 70 liters using full heat mode. That's what my van's tank holds.
What tank do you use to fuel your heater NWH?
Thanks
.
In my experience Spruce, you're not far off. I have a 25 ltr tank which I can get about 20 ltrs out of before it drops below the output level. I have to fill it about every 7 working days, so about 60 litres a month. That's running permanently, sometimes full blast, sometimes tickover with no bypass fitted. If I don't mix 4 litres kero in with the diesel its a disaster, smoke everywhere. I am running a thermo 90st though.
Your ST90 will use more diesel than the Thermo Top C . Webasto quote 1.1 lph on full heat mode, but on the lower heat cycle it could use much less than the Thermo Top C in the same heat mode (0.19 - 0.9 lph.)
I think the ST90 is more suited to window cleaning provided you can bleed that little extra heat off to stop it entering it stop/start cycle. If you have a 2 man system and there is only you, then you can run you second pump on slow and bleed that extra heat back to the tank. I have plans to add a third heat exchanger and trigger a third pump using a digital heat controller to do this.
What tank are you using? I think one of the problems is trying to find a suitable tank that has a fuel guage on it or that is opaque so you can see at a glance how much full you have left. If the unit locks out due to no fuel then it can be a palava getting it up and running.
Where do you buy Kerosene in small quantities from?
The tank came as part of the system from facelift, it's translucent so I can see when I need a refill. I'll take a pic and send it over if you would like?
At the moment I'm getting the kero from Homebase £7.99 for 4 litres. Obviously this isn't sustainable in the long run but after the smoking issues I was reluctant to buy a 200 ltr drum until I knew for sure what the issue was. I wonder if the system was setup to run on Kerosene and I didn't realise. Is it possible to have a different burner for kerosene and when I lumped diesel in on top, eventually the existing Kerosene wasn't diluting it enough hence the smoke?
Interesting you feel the 90ST is more suited. When you posted the links to refurb Thermotops I saved it in case I have any more problems with my ST. The full refurbed Thermo is almost the same price as a replacement burner in the 90st.
I said that because the ST90 has more fire power as its a bigger heater. On reduced heat mode it also produces less heat so it takes longer in reduced heat mode to reach max temperature before the heater shuts down
The ST90 also has provision to achieve 3 different programmed heat setting by how you deal with pin 7 on the X12 connector.
The difference between putting a 12v supply to that pin or connecting it up to negative could mean the heater running 8 degrees hotter.
The Thermo Top C was designed as a 'basic' engine preheater. Put it on 30 minutes before you set off and you will have a defrosted car when you set off. It heats the coolant water in the engine and once it reach 30 degrees it switches on the cars internal heater blower. Once the engine's temperature reaches 74 degrees it goes into half heat mode. At 77 degrees it switches off and the heater goes into its shut down cycle. Once you understand that then you should be able to work out how best you can work with it.
NWH has found the best way of keeping his Thermo Top C working. Don't stop to talk and when travelling between jobs have the hot water that normal goes to your brush recycling back to the tank.
If you can put a photo up of your fuel tank that would be appreciated.